Chart House v. PlamettoClub

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 2004
Docket2004-UP-634
StatusUnpublished

This text of Chart House v. PlamettoClub (Chart House v. PlamettoClub) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chart House v. PlamettoClub, (S.C. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE.  IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 239(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
In The Court of Appeals


Chart House, Inc., a Delaware Corporation,        Appellant,

v.

Palmetto Bay Club Owners’ Association, Inc., a/k/a Palmetto Bay Club HPR; Palmetto Bay Horizontal Property Regime; Cross Island Associates, LLC; W.G. Shuckers, Inc.; Brighton Bay Associates, LP; and the Yacht Club of Hilton Head Island,        Defendants,

of whom Palmetto Bay Club Owners’ Association, a/k/a Palmetto Bay Club HPR is        Respondent.


Appeal From Beaufort County
Jackson V. Gregory, Circuit Court Judge
Gerald C. Smoak, Circuit Court Judge


Unpublished Opinion No. 2004-UP-634
Heard October 13, 2004 – Filed December 15, 2004


REVERSED


James B. Richardson, Jr., of Columbia, for Appellant.

Otto W. Ferrene, of Hilton Head, for Respondent.

HEARN, C.J.:  Chart House, Inc., appeals an order of the circuit court granting summary judgment to Palmetto Bay Club Owners’ Association, a/k/a Palmetto Bay Club HPR (“Palmetto Bay Club”) and dismissing Palmetto Bay Club from the case.  We reverse.

FACTS

On November 1, 1978, CHE, Inc., entered into a twenty-five year ground lease for the Chart House Restaurant property at Palmetto Bay Marina on Hilton Head Island.  The Appellant, Chart House, Inc., is CHE’s successor in interest.  Palmetto Bay Marina, a partnership entity, was the lessor of the property at that time.  The ground lease granted a leasehold interest in the Chart House property, “together with all present and future improvements, Lessor’s easements, rights of way, servitudes and appurtenances in adjoining and adjacent land . . . .”  This lease was never recorded. 

Prior to 1982, Palmetto Bay Marina owned the entire marina area.  Palmetto Bay Marina split into two separate partnerships known as Marina Development Associates and Palmetto Bay Associates.  On October 5, 1982, Palmetto Bay Marina conveyed a portion of the real property adjacent to the Chart House tract, including the parcel now owned by Palmetto Bay Club, to Marina Development.  Palmetto Bay Marina assigned the parcel leased to Chart House to Palmetto Bay Associates. 

On October 8, 1982, Marina Development and Palmetto Bay Associates granted each other, by means of a cross easement agreement, reciprocal easements for ingress, egress, and parking in the area between the two properties.  This easement was to run with the title to the Chart House property.  Chart House joined in the agreement “for the sole purpose of consenting to the easements, rights and privileges granted pursuant [to the agreement] to the extent such easements, rights and privileges affect[ed] the Chart House property.”  This document was subsequently recorded. 

On the same date, Chart House entered into a “First Amendment and Modification” agreement (“Amended Agreement”) with Palmetto Bay Associates, its new lessor.  The Amended Agreement referenced both the ground lease and the cross easement agreement, and purported to “amend and modify” the ground lease.  The parties also executed and recorded a “Memorandum of Lease,” which referenced the original ground lease.  The Amended Agreement substituted Palmetto Bay Associates for Palmetto Bay Marina as lessor.  In addition, the Amended Agreement contained a section entitled “Substitution of Property,” which described the leased premises,  substituting “Exhibit A” of the Amended Agreement for “Exhibit A” of the ground lease.  This section also contained a release clause providing that “CHE hereby acknowledges and agrees that it shall from and after the date hereof have no rights whatsoever in and to any real property under the Lease except for the Property described in the attached Exhibit “A.” 

At issue is the scope of the effect of the release clause.  Chart House contends, and Palmetto Bay Club does not deny, that the substitution of property was necessary to conform the ground lease’s description of the premises to the redrawn property lines as a result of the conveyance from Palmetto Bay Marina to Marina Development.  Therefore, Chart House argues that the above-referenced language was intended only as a release of all claims of interest to the real property under the ground lease.  Palmetto Bay Club’s contention is that this language modified not only the ground lease, but the cross easement agreement as well, so as to divest Chart House of any interest in the ingress/egress and parking easement over the Marina Development property.

On March 28, 2001, Chart House filed suit naming several defendants, including Palmetto Bay Club.  The complaint alleged causes of action for (1) nuisance, (2) breach of covenants, and (3) trespass based on Chart House’s rights under both the ground lease, as modified by the Amended Agreement, and the cross easement agreement.  The causes of action for nuisance and trespass dealt with parking and named all the defendants.  However, the cause of action for breach of covenant not to compete named only Cross Island Associates, LLC, and its lessee, W.G. Shuckers, Inc., and alleged a breach of the covenant not to compete between Chart House and Palmetto Bay Marina contained in the ground lease, which prohibited Palmetto Bay Marina or its successors from engaging in the restaurant business. 

Both Cross Island and Palmetto Bay Club subsequently moved for partial summary judgment on five nearly identical grounds, all of which went to the enforceability of the ground lease.  Palmetto Bay Club’s motion also contained a sixth ground, as follows: “That a finding that any of the above are decided in favor of the movant, result [sic] in an order dismissing the movant from the first, second and third causes of action.”  Both motions were argued together at Palmetto Bay Club’s request.  At the hearing, counsel for Cross Island specified that its motion was directed solely at the covenant not to compete contained in the ground lease and the effect of the Amended Agreement on the lease.  The trial court granted summary judgment to both Cross Island and Palmetto Bay Club on the breach of the covenant not to compete claim.  The court also dismissed both defendants from the action, holding that the release language in the Amended Agreement quoted above operated to divest Chart House of any interest in any property other than its leasehold. 

Chart House filed a timely motion to reconsider, which was denied by Judge Gregory. [1]   Chart House appealed from the order granting summary judgment to Palmetto Bay Club. 

STANDARD OF REVIEW

“Summary judgment is appropriate when it is clear there is no genuine issue of material fact and the conclusions and inferences to be drawn from the facts are undisputed.”  McClanahan v. Richland County Council, 350 S.C.

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Chart House v. PlamettoClub, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chart-house-v-plamettoclub-scctapp-2004.